Let’s get on with it.
Virginia Mayo/Pool/EPA
Is there light at the end of the Brexit talks tunnel?
The Queen inspects the Ulster Defence Regiment in 1977.
Ron Bell/PA Archive
In the 1970s, the British army struggled to contain the subversive activities of members linked to paramilitary organisation.
A poster protesting against a hard border in Killeen, Northern Ireland, near the Irish border.
Aidan Crawley/EPA
Since the Good Friday Agreement, political dialogue has opened up along the Irish border.
Federico Zovadelli / Shutterstock.com
Northern Ireland has a tourist circuit steeped in death and disaster – is this a good thing?
Michel Barnier visits the border in May.
PA/Liam McBurney
The European Commission has published its guidelines for talks on this thorny issue.
The two couples challenging Northern Ireland’s ban on same-sex marriage, leaving the High Court in Belfast.
Brian Lawless/PA Wire
A judge in Belfast has dismissed a challenge to Northern Ireland’s ban on same-sex marriage citing it as a ‘social policy’ issue.
PA/Niall Carson
The UK government continues to insist there will be no physical markers on the border. But how can that work?
Leo Varadkar speaks at Queen’s University Belfast.
Andrew Towe Photography/Queen's University Belfast
Ireland’s new leader has a warning for those who want a hard border: come up with a plan, or EU talks will stall.
Between the devil and the deep blue sea.
Rober Lindsdell/flickr.com
Political tensions are mounting over the future of the border between Ireland and Northern Ireland.
PA/Niall Carson
A depressing ruling from a Court of Appeal and a triumph in Westminster all at once.
PA Images
An exclusive interview with Norman Tebbit on Thatcher, Brexit, Theresa May’s potential successors … and a certain former chancellor.
Nice work team.
A generous funding package for Northern Ireland has gone down like a lead balloon in other parts of the country.
Theresa May has agreed on terms with the DUP to support her government.
PA/Dominic Lipinski
The unionists have pledged to back up the Conservative government in exchange for an extra £1 billion for Northern Ireland
Protestors outside the High Court in Belfast in February 2017 calling for an Irish Language Act.
Niall Carson/PA Wire
The issue of an Irish Language Act has been a sticking point at Stormont.
Campaign groups are concerned about the party’s new influence in Westminster.
PA
Northern Ireland remains out of step with the rest of the UK when it comes to accessing abortion. Now the people behind that have become extremely powerful.
Sinn Fein leaders Michelle O'Neill and Gerry Adams must be thinking about their future.
PA
The Irish nationalists now have seven MPs but they have historically refused to attend the Westminster parliament.
Democratic Unionist Leader Arlene Foster announces her openeness to talks with the Conservatives.
Brian Lawless/PA Wire
A deal could have huge implications for Brexit and politics in Northern Ireland.
DUP, keeping your government strong and stable.
PA
This is not the first time a Westminster government has needed support from unionists.
I’ve got your back T, there are just a few little suggestions I’d like to go over first though.
PA
Theresa May is to rely on support from Northern Ireland’s biggest party in order to survive as a minority government. But that help doesn’t come for free.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire
Analysis of what went wrong for Theresa May and what went right for Jeremy Corbyn in the last episode of our election analysis podcast.